Cost-effectiveness of CA125- and age-informed risk-based triage for ovarian cancer detection in primary care
Menée à partir de données anglaises portant sur 276 827 femmes (âge moyen : 54,6 ans), cette étude compare, en fonction de deux catégories d'âge (inférieur à 50 ans ; au moins 50 ans), le rapport coût-efficacité de 5 stratégies, basées sur le niveau sérique de l'antigène CA125 et les résultats d'une échographie abdominale, pour identifier les patientes susceptibles de présenter des lésions cancéreuses de l'ovaire
Background : In England, current practice is cancer antigen 125 (CA125) testing with pelvic ultrasound scan (USS) if CA125 is ≥35 U/mL for triage of women with suspected ovarian cancer (OC) in primary care. However, OC risk varies with CA125 level and age. The Ovatools model predicts OC risk based on age and CA125 levels to support primary care triage.
Methods : We evaluated five alternative triage pathways for suspected OC in primary care, using a decision model. Two CA125-USS sequential pathways used Ovatools risk: 1-3% (subsequent USS) and ≥3% (urgent referral), or age-adjusted CA125 thresholds equivalent to Ovatools risks. Three pathways involved concurrent CA125-USS testing, with referral if abnormal USS or one of the following: (1) Ovatools risk ≥3%, (2) CA125 above the equivalent age-adjusted threshold, or (3) CA125 ≥ 35 U/mL. Clinical and cost-effectiveness was compared against current practice for women over and under 50 years.
Results : All alternative pathways increased benefits at age ≥50 years, at additional cost. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratios for CA125-USS sequential pathways were below £30,000, dropping below £20,000 if the Ovatools threshold for USS increased to 1.2–1.4% risk.
Discussion : For women ≥50 years, the Ovatools and equivalent age-adjusted threshold sequential pathways are cost-effective compared to current practice.
British Journal of Cancer , article en libre accès, 2025